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SAINT CLOTILDA
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W vv
SAINT ClOrilDAT.Tzoot
GODEFROI KURTHPROFESSOR AT THE LlfecE UNIVERSITY
TRANSLATED BY
V. M. CRAWFORDWITH A PREFACE BY
G. TYRRELL, S.J.
LONDON
DUCKWORTH & CO., 3, HENRIETTA STREET, W.C.NEW YORK, CINCINNATI & CHICAGO : DUBLIN :
BENZIGER BROS. M. H. GILL & SON.
1898
ol.C^x;l6?3
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in 2011 with funding from
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EDITOR'S PREFACE
XT ONE have less to fear from a conscientious^ ^ application of the historical and critical methods
than have Catholics. That many of them show adisposition to shrink nervously from the operation
may be ascribed partly to that same feebleness offaith vi^hich so often makes the Christian put his
trust in physical force, or in wealth, or craft, or
intellectual subtlety for the defence of the Church,
as though she had been created or sustained by
these things, or could ever be overthrown by their
means ; but it is also due to a reluctance on thepart of the imagination to destroy much that it haslaboriously built up, to part with its favourite pictures,
to discard old words and symbols and expressions,
and to learn new ones. The imagination is a moreconservative faculty than the understanding, uponwhose mobility it acts as a check, mostly for good,but at times, no doubt, for ill ; we change ourjudgment quickly enough, but the imagination takes
a long time to adapt itself to a new truth ; there, whatwe know to be past still lingers as present, and
what has been proved false still figures as reality.A well-instructed Catholic is quite aware of the cleardistinction between what is an essential part of the
Church's dogmatic teaching and what belongs to
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vi EDITOR'S PREFACE
that unsorted mass of pious tradition which she
reverences and preserves for the sake of the yet
unscvered grains of truth it contains, but which sherecognises at its true value and gives to us not as
history and theology but as popular tradition and
opinion. Yet, though admitting this notorious
distinction, we sometimes resent the disturbanceof our long-cherished and familiar fancies as muchas we should an assault upon our faith, and aredisposed to regard the iconoclastic critic as next
door to a heretic. No doubt such criticism hasoften been undertaken with hostile intent, or, at
least, in a carping illiberal spirit, but it has over
and over again been the work of those renowned,
not only for their orthodoxy, but for their sanctity.
It is not always the time for weeding, but weedingno less than sowing has its time, namely, when itbids fair to choke the good seed. Short of that it
may be expedient to suffer tares and wheat to growside by side lest the truth come away with the error;but the scandal of a critical age and that of an un-
critical age are diametrically opposite and the offence
given by an excessive credulity in the one case is as
great as that given by undue scepticism in the other.
It is more especially in regard to the lives of the
saints that we must prepare our imagination for thesame kind of shock which it has to bear, though with
less difficulty, in respect to secular biography or
history. But, in truth, as Professor Kurth insists
in the appendix to this volume, the saints have
nothing to lose and everything to gain from being
treated as St Clotilda has been here treated. For
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EDITOR'S PREFACE vii
in the light of historical criticism her character is
revealed as possessing " an unity and a sincerity
which were lacking in the traditional portrait, in
which she made her appearance at a given momentin the role of a virago thirsting for blood." The truththus reconstructed is " of higher value than the
legend," and "the tender figure of our Saint has
recovered the halo whose brightness has been
dimmed by irreverent traditions."
We have lately seen a reproduction of a portraitfrom life of St Catherine of Genoa set side by sidewith the conventional vulgarity. " How humanHow modern ! " is the first comment suggested toevery mind ; in other words, " How understand-able ! How sympathetic ! " Yet what the saints have
suffered at the hands of artists is not worthy tobe compared with the great weight of injury which-
has been inflicted upon them by uncritical hagio-graphy. To portray the saint as he was commonlyunderstood by his time or as he exists in popular
tradition, is to credit the majority with greater
judgment and discrimination than it ever possesses.
A great hero or statesman is deservedly reverencedby the crowd as one worthy of their worship, and
forthwith they ascribe to him all that to their mind
constitutes greatness and goodness. Well-meant
as their picture of him may be, it is none the lessgrotesque and untruthful. Had his been a greatnessafter their mind, he would never have won theirworship, for we worship what is greater and betterthan our own ideal. The devout peasant thinks toadd splendour to some divinely conceived present-
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viii EDITOR'S PREFACE
ment of the Madonna by a crown of tinsel andspangles of coloured glass, having no eye for the
beauty which he buries beneath all this frippery. Aless inadequate taste while respecting his attention
will set aside his judgment. To a bloody-minded andbarbarous people, in a state of spiritual infancy, howcould Clotilda, the great and the good, lack any
element necessary to their crude ideal ; how couldshe be otherwise than vengeful, if vengeance were a
point of honour, and if to forgive were weakness andcowardice ? As surely as the mind of childhoodhas got its stereotyped king and queen and prince,
ever crowned in high state and radiant with gold,
so surely has the childlike multitude certain moulds
into which every hero or saint must be pressed unless
the public imagination is to be pained and shocked.
We see the same law of fashion at work every-where; music has its cadences and endings which
cannot be altered without outrage to the expectant
public ear, and many a novelist has been censuredfor leaving the well-trodden lines of convention in
favour of a conclusion truer to the prosaic and
painful realities of everyday life. The mind cravesfor rhythm and repetition as well as for novelty andvariety, and indeed it is only by their combination
that it can be really soothed and satisfied. It must,
like the Liturgy, have its " Common of Saints " aswell as its " Proper of Saints," its unity as well as
its diversity. Without some such mould or formit could not tie facts together, or receive themunder any sort of category; so that while we re-cognise this law as being often a source of danger
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CONTENTS
CHAPTER IPAGE
INTRODUCTORY ..... ICHAPTER II
THE CHILDHOOD OF CLOTILDA. . .
17
CHAPTER IIITHE FIRST YEARS OF MARRIED LIFE . . 30
CHAPTER IV
THE CONVERSION OF CLOVIS ...42
CHAPTER VTHE LAST YEARS OF MARRIED LIFE . . 54
CHAPTER VI
YEARS OF WIDOWHOOD ....72
CHAPTER VIIFRESH TRIALS ..... 9I
xi
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xii CONTENTS
CHAPTER VIIIPAGE
CLOTILDA'S SANCTITY .... lOOCHAPTER IX
THE POSTHUMOUS GLORY OF ST CLOTILDA . Il8
CHAPTER XCONCLUSION ...... 127APPENDIX ...... 131
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SAINT CLOTILDA
CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTORY
''T^HE part played by women in the conversion of^ nations to the Gospel, suggests one of the most
beautiful aspects of the history of Christianity. No-
where do their real strength and their apparent
weakness stand out in so touching a contrast.At first sight we might be tempted to believe that
the fortunes of Catholic society and the great interests
of the Christian world have been decided quite in-
dependently of any participation of the female sex.
The Church has excluded women from the sacerdotaloffice, and has even commanded them, by the voiceof the Apostle, to keep silence in the company of thefaithful. She has not called them to any share inher world-wide cares. She has abstained fromburdening their feeble shoulders with the heavy
weight of the apostolate, and when, at a given
moment, she confided to them certain functions,these were the humblest of all : the duties of deacon-
esses or servants. By sweeping them aside fromthe great stage of history, by confining them to their
own firesides in the name of the dignity of their sex,A3 I
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INTRODUCTORY 3
wives, and through the course of centuries they have
consoled, encouraged and fortified the humble
guardians of the domestic hearth. Let us recallthe suave words and the tender accent with which
they are commented on by one of the doctors of thefourth century. Writing to a great Roman lady onthe education of her daughter, St Jerome allows her
to hope that the child may one day become the in-strument of the conversion of her grandfather, whose
soul was still sunk in the darkness of paganism." Who would have thought," he writes, " that thegrand-daughter of the pontifP Albinus would be born
of the vow of a Christian mother, that her baby lipswould stammer the praises of Christ in the presenceof her delighted grandfather, and that the aged
heathen would clasp in his arms a Christian virgin ?
No, our expectation has not been vain. This old
man who is surrounded by an escort of Christiansons and grandsons, is already a candidate of our
Faith." And, continuing to expound to the mother
his scheme of education, the Saint expresses the
hope that the child will grow up to be the good angelof her grandfather, that she will sit on his knees and
clasp him round the neck whenever she sees him,
and that she will sing in his ears Alleluia.^
In this letter St Jerome has to a great extent
revealed the secret of the conversion of the Romanworld. It was the Christian women who were theintroducers of Jesus Christ to the hearth of the
ancient consular families. It was they who whis-pered in familiar converse, or who taught by the still
^ St Jerome, Epistolae, 107 {ad Laetam).
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4 SAINT CLOTILDA
more persuasive method of personal example, thedoctrines fallen from the lips of the Apostle. His
voice had been heard but once, ere the hand of theexecutioner had silenced it for ever. But it hadfound an echo which wsis prolonged in accents of
infinite sweetness from the lips of the Christian
women who had been among his hearers. Who candefine the limits of this domestic apostolate, of this
indefatigable propaganda which was never moreefficacious than when its promoters appeared tohave renounced all conquering ambitions ? Onething is certain, that from the very first day of the
preaching of the Gospel women have rivalled menby their faith and courage: inferior in other respects,
they proved themselves their equals in the face of
martyrdom, and they won for their sex an honour-able rank which has never since been called in
question.
There came a moment in history when the missionof women took upon itself truly noble proportions :the moment when, the whole civilised world havingfallen into ruin,
a newworld had to
bebuilt
up outof the elements of the barbarian races. At that time,
turning towards the latter, the Church saw before
her only heathens and Arians, but she found her
auxiliaries among their women. Christian andCatholic queens were seated on barbarian thrones,
and it was they who prepared the way for themissionaries.
To sketch in a rapid survey all that civilisationowes to Christian queens, is to exhibit in its true
light the historic importance of Queen Clotilda.
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INTRODUCTORY 5
She heads the long line of chosen women, who atthe dawn of the modern world were the leaders andteachers of nations. The first in regard to chrono-logical order, she is also the first by the surprising
magnitude of the work in which she was called tobear a part. The conversion of the Franks, theglory of which she shares with the great Bishop of
Reims, altered the centre of gravity of history : it
caused the sceptre of the West to pass into thehands of the Catholic Church, and it assured to the
new converts throughout a long series of ages a fore-most place in the annals of civilisation. Converted
to Christianity they gave an impulse to the rest of
the barbarian world. Other nations entered the
Church walking in their footsteps, and treading the
path along which Clotilda had led the way.Their neighbours across the Channel were the
first to follow the Prankish example. In vain the
Britons, with blind patriotism, had refused to carry
the torch of faith among their savage conquerors:Catholic charity was more potent than national
resentment, and missionaries from Rome initiatedthe Anglo-Saxons into the benefits of the Gospel.
It was a woman who unlocked for them the doorsof the island of Saints, and this woman was noother than the great grand -daughter of Clotilda.
Bertha for such was her name had been given inmarriage to King Ethelbert of Kent, on condition
that she should be allowed the free exercise of her
religion, and she lived for many years as a Christianat the pagan court of Canterbury, having as her
chaplain and as the protector of her faith, accord-
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6 SAINT CLOTILDA
ing to the expression of the chronicler, a Prankish
bishop of the name of Luithard, who had followedher across the Channel.^
Anancient Christian
sanctuary situated on a hill outside the town, the
Church of St Martin, served as a meeting-place forthe little Christian colony. When St Augustinearrived at the head of his forty missionaries, he
found in Queen Bertha a powerful auxiliary at thecourt of her husband. Ethelbert was ripe for con-version ; he was the first to receive baptism in thekingdom of Kent, and he became an ardent andzealous propagator of the Gospel among hispeople.'^
Initiated through the co-operation of a woman,the conversion of Britain to Christianity was ac-
complished by the same means. Ethelburga, thedaughter of Ethelbert, by marrying King Edwin ofNorthumbria, carried the faith among the Anglesof whom St Gregory the Great had desired to makeangels. The young king had promised to respectthe faith of his bride, and to grant her full facilities
for the exercise of her religion. On this occasionalso, a bishop, Paulinus, had accompanied the young
Queen.^ Thus her little court constituted on thebanks of the H umber an advance-guard of Christian-ity, and a luminous and edifying centre of Christian
life. Ethelburga gained sufficient ascendency over
Edwin to induce him to consent to the baptism of
their daughter, and he himself, a man of serious and^ The Ven. Bede, Historia ecclesiastica Anglorum, I. 25.2 The Ven. Bede, Historia ecclesiastica Anglorum, I. 25 and 26.^ Id.^ op. cit.^ II. 9.
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INTRODUCTORY 7
thoughtful mind, began to look with favourable eyes
on the Christian law which surrounded him in hisown household. It was about this time that twoletters arrived from Rome, sent by the PopeBoniface, and addressed, one to Edwin himselfexhorting him to take the decisive step, and theother to the Queen urging her forward in herapostolic work. The pontifical document is wellworth reading, for it shows the extent to which the
Church counted on the co-operation of women atthat time, and how highly it appreciated their assist-ance. After having congratulated Ethelburga on
her faith and deplored her husband's unbelief, the
sovereign pontiff exhorts her to neglect no meansby which a true marriage between her and Edwin
may be brought about, and an end put to thisdivorce of souls perpetuated by the gloom of
paganism. "Take courage, most worthy daughter;do not cease to implore of the divine mercy thefavour of a perfect union between you and your
husband, in order that through the unity of faith,
you may be one soul as you are one body, and thatafter this life your union may be maintained in thelife to come. Direct all your efforts to softening
his heart by instilling into it the divine precepts ;make him realise the sublimity of the faith thatyou profess, and how great is the gift of regenerationthat you have deserved. Through you the words
of Scripture must be verified in a striking manner:* The unbelieving husband is sanctified by the believ-
ing wife.' You have only found grace in God'ssight, in order that you may bring back in abund-
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INTRODUCTORY 9
" You have frequently heard how your grand-mother Clotilda, of blessed memory, came to thekingdom of the Franks and how she brought KingClovis to the Catholic Faith. As he was a manof good understanding, he declined to accede to
her wishes until he had fully grasped the truth of
our doctrines. Once convinced, he prostrated him-self before the tomb of St Martin, and promised toreceive baptism without delay. You have been told
of his subsequent exploits against the hereticsAlaric and Gondebald ; you cannot have forgotten
the noble gifts that fell even in this world to the
lot both of him and of his sons." I ask you then, why should not a mighty and
illustrious prince such as King Alboin be converted,
or at least why should he be so slow in seeking thepath of salvation? I beseech Thee, oh God, whoart the glory of the Saints and the salvation of all,
pour down Thy Grace into his heart. And you,Queen Clotsinda, in your intercourse with him,come to our aid, in order that we may all rejoicewith God in the conquest of so shining a star, soprecious a pearl. I salute you with all fervour;
I implore of you not to remain inactive; do not
cease to lift up your voice, do not cease to sing the
praises of God. You have heard the word, ' The un-believing husband is sanctified by the believing wife.*
Remember that our firmest hope of salvation and of
the remission of our sins, rests upon the conversionof a sinner from his evil ways. Watch, watch ; Godis on our side ; act, I beseech you, in such a waythat, through you, the people of Lombardy may
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10 SAINT CLOTILDA
become powerful against their enemies, and thatwe may all have cause to rejoice over your happinessand the prosperity of your spouse." ^
This pathetic appeal from the bishop to the
Christian queen remained for a time without re-
sponse ; Clotsinda died in the flower of her youth,
and the second marriage of Alboin with Rosamondseemed likely to throw back the Lombards into theirprevious state of barbarism. But that which was
denied to the grand-daughter of Clotilda was to beaccomplished by another princess of the Prankish
house.
There lived in Bavaria, towards the year 589, a
princess renowned alike for her beauty and her
virtues ; this was Theodelind, daughter of Duke
Garibald. Authari, king of the Lombards,fell
inlove with her, and obtained her hand in marriage.
Popular poetry has seized upon their espousals and
has woven the tale into one of those graceful nuptiallegends of which we find an example in the historyof Queen Clotilda herself.^ Theodelind not onlyreigned in her husband's heart, but she gained the
affections of the whole nation, so that when Autharidied, the Lombards decided to elect as their kingthe prince on whom Queen Theodelind should de-cide to bestow her hand.^ Her choice fell on DukeAgilulf, and thus. Queen by a double right, she wasable to occupy towards the papacy in the sixth
century a position very similar to that of the Coun-^ Monumenta Germaniae historica, Epistolae, III. pp. 119- 123.2 Paul Diacre, Historia Langobardorum, III. 30.^ Paul Diacre, op. cit., III. 35.
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INTRODUCTORY 11
tess Matilda at a later date. It was she who arrestedAgilulf in his victorious march towards Rome ; thebarbarian obeyed the voice of his wife, and PopeGregory the Great wrote her a letter of thanks in
which he declared that she had deserved well of
those, whose blood would have been shed save for
her intervention. Theodelind effected yet moreshe converted her husband to the Catholic faith.
The Cathedral of Monza, near Milan, where subse-quently the coronation of all the Lombard kingstook place, is the work of Theodelind, and the
celebrated " Dialogues " of St Gregory the Great,
bear on their title-page the name of the Queen.Like St Clotilda, Theodelind had the sorrow of
owning, in the person of Adalwald, an unworthy
son; but her life's work was immortal, and theconverted Lombards remained one of the gloriesof the Catholic Church.^
In the course of this same century, the piousTheodosia, daughter of the Greek governor of Betica,
instructed the sons of the Arian Leovigild, king of
the Visigoths, in the orthodox faith. Hermengild
and Recared were taught devotion to the Catholic
Church at their mother's knee, and these early
lessons made an indelible impression on their minds.When, at a later date, their father married a fanaticalArian of the name of Goswintha, and showed himselfa persecutor of the Catholics, Hermengild did not
hesitate to make open profession of his faith. Sup-ported and encouraged by his wife Ingonda, a great-
grand-daughter of St Clotilda, he perished rather
1 Paul Diacre, Hist. Langobardortwi, III. 30.
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12 SAINT CLOTILDA
than abjure his faith, and Spain venerates in himone of her most glorious martyrs. His blood proved
of marvellous fertility; hardly had his younger brother
Recared ascended the throne, than he solemnly em-
braced Christianity, and the third Council of Toledo,held in 589, proclaimed to the whole world that Spain
aspired to be a Catholic nation. This glorious title
which she has continued to bear through fourteen
centuries of a history rich in great deeds, was the
price of the blood of Hermengild and the lessons ofTheodosia. The Christian mother from her tomb hadtriumphed over the persecuting father.
The West was converted ; henceforward her fourmost noble nations belonged to the Catholic Churchthe hands of Christian women had severed the heavychains of paganism, and had unwoven, stitch by stitch,
the net of Arian heresy.
Turning our eyes in another quarter, we find areproduction of the spectacle of which we have al-ready been witnesses, among the four great romano-germanic nations. With the ninth century, thehour sounded for the admission of the Slav nations
into the Church. Bohemia is the first to attractour attention. There the protector of the Christian
faith was a princess of the name of Ludmilla,whom a grateful Church venerates on her altars.Converted towards the year 879, with her husband
Boriwoi, by St Methodius, the great Apostle of
the Slavs, she found herself exposed to everyform of danger in the midst of a heathen people,
more especially after the death of Boriwoi in 890had left her without a protector. Her own sons
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INTRODUCTORY 13
turned against her, and her daughter-in-law Dra-
homira, became her most cruel persecutor ; but shenever lost courage in the midst of her trials, and she
succeeded in retaining in her own hands the educa-tion of her grandson Wenceslas, of whom she made aSaint as great as herself. It is difficult to decide
between the rival claims to our admiration of grand-
mother and grandson, when we read the accounts ofthese noble-hearted rulers: she the persecuted woman
whom nothing could shake ; he the powerful princewhom nothing could seduce ; she leading a life ofprayer and vigils, of alms-giving and mortification ;he raising with his own hand the wheat destined forthe bread of the holy sacrifice, and refusing his signa-
ture to sentences of death. Both died martyrs to
the faith under the most cruel circumstances : shemurdered by order of her daughter-in-law, and he avictim to the blows of his own brother Boleslas.But it was Ludmilla who trained up Wenceslas, itwas she who gave to Bohemia this incomparableprince, and in all his great work of civilisation she
has a right to share in his glory. Many storms haveswept over Bohemia in the course of its troubled ex-istence, but nothing has been able to uproot the faith
planted by Ludmilla in its soil, and St Wenceslas
remains to-day a more popular hero than John Huss.
It was through the intervention of ChristianBohemia that a new era dawned for Poland.
Dubrava was the Clotilda of her race. Married tothe heathen Mieceslas, the leader of the great
Polish nation, she had the happiness of converting
him in 965, and with him his whole people, who
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14 SAINT CLOTILDA
brought their chivalrous courage to the service of the
Church. Tradition has preserved nothing of Dubravasave her name, and the memory of this great actbut it is sufficient for her glory, and we can v^rellsay of her that her works proclaim her blessed.
There remained in the extreme East of Europe,still sunk in semi-barbarism, yet another Slav people
whose religious destiny was to be decided in thecourse of the ninth century : this was the Russian
nation. Their name had re-echoed across the vastexpanse of the steppes, and on the borders of the
Dnieper they ruled as sovereigns over an immenseregion stretching from Kiev, their capital, as far as
Novgorod, which acknowledged their suzerainty.
Their national hero, Igor, so celebrated in all their
epic legends,had passed away
inthe midst of the
most fabulous exploits. And it was his widow, Olga,who was the first to receive baptism at Constanti-nople, the city which had trembled before her
husband's advance. She took on this occasion thename of Helen, a name which seemed to foreshadowa new Constantine.
But Olga's son, Sviatoslav, was not destined to ful-fil the hopes built upon his mother's name. Heremained obstinately attached to pagan rites, in spite
of all his mother's entreaties, repulsing her with the
words "What, you expect me to accept a foreignfaith ? My droujina would make fun of me ! " It was
almost the same reply as Clovis gave to St Remi" It is not I you must convert, it is the soldiers of
my guard." But, unlike the husband of Clotilda, theson of Olga had not the courage to carry his men
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INTRODUCTORY 15
with him, and the saintly widow died in 969 withoutthe joy of assisting at the conversion of her people.
And yet neither her example nor her apostolate wasto remain without fruit. A few years later her grand-son Vladimir flung the idol Peroun into the Dnieper,
and displayed the Cross of Christ upon his standard.
Like Theodosia, Olga had triumphed from her tomb.
The Russians have very rightly cultivated a devotionto her august memory. " She was the precursor ofChristianity into Russia," writes their chronicler, "asthe dawn is the precursor of the sun. As the moonshines in the middle of the night, so she shone in the
midst of a pagan people. She was as a pearl on adung-heap ; she purified herself in the sacred waters,
and put off the garb of sin of the old Adam and put
on that of the new Adam who is Christ. Thereforewe say to her, " Rejoice that thou hast made Godknown unto Russia, for thou hast been the origin ofthe alliance between Russia and God." ^
It is not without reason that we have groupedtogether the foregoing facts. Taken in their entiretythey prove to us that Christian Europe owes muchmore to her queens than to her kings. They alsothrow a strong light on the part played by St
Clotilda. For it is she who heads the procession ofcrowned evangelists, and everything that was accom-plished at a later date by Christian queens, maybe traced back in part to her glorious initiative. We
^ The so-called Chronicle of Nestor, translated by L. Liger, p.54. The question of Olga's Saintship has never been decided.The Bollandists leave the question in suspense : they place heramong the /ra^/^^wzmz and reserve judgment (July nth).
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CHAPTER II
THE CHILDHOOD OF CLOTILDA
npHE kingdom of the Burgundians appears on thethreshold of modern times as one of those many
ephemeral creations whose ruins were to strew the
pages of history before at length a nation rose up
capable of resisting the destructive power of
centuries. The whole history of the Burgundianpeople gives evidence of something precarious and
incomplete, and the most striking pages inits
annalsare those that record the catastrophes by which it
was rapidly brought to its ruin. And yet its exist-ence was not without advantages for civilisation ;it gave St Clotilda to the world, and this single act
would suffice to cast a certain lustre on its memory.At the time of the birth of the Saint whose life
will be recorded in these pages, the Burgundians
had already passed through the greater portion of
their brief and dramatic career. A generation hadpassed away since the year 437, when the kingdomwhich they had founded on the banks of the Rhine
had perished beneath the onslaught of the Huns,
a kingdom whose memory still lives, preserved inthe legends at once so tender and so awe-inspiring
of German folk-lore. They now occupied SouthernGaul, of which they had taken possession, partly as
b3 17
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conquerors, partly as fugitives after the misfortunes
which had gone far towards putting an end to their
national existence. Having first taken refuge in the
Savoy Alps, they had made their way down thebeautiful valleys of the Saone and the Rhone fromLangres as far as Avignon and the Durance. Therethey had founded a kingdom which, during theclosing years of the fifth century, seemed destined
to play a great role in history. Established between
Roman Italy, the last preserver of the imperial tradi-tions, and the conquering kingdom of the Visigoths,
from which they were separated by the bed of the
Rhone, they had become in a sense the arbiters ofthe destinies of the Empire. They preferred tonumber themselves among its defenders rather thanits enemies, and on more than one occasion theBurgundians fought on the side of Rome, which re-warded their kings by conferring on them imperialhonours, especially the title of Master of the Knights,
which Alaric himself had aspired to possess.
It might have been expected that a nation so
enamoured of Rome and of civilisation would havebeen further distinguished by an unswerving fidelity
to the Roman faith. Unhappily this was not thecase, and the fact gives proof of the incoherency
and indecision which were latent in the Burgundian
character. Catholics in the first instance, if weaccept the testimony of Paulus Orosius, the Bur-
gundians had allowed themselves to be influencedby the active religious propaganda carried on by
their neighbours the Visigoths, and had fallen away
from their earlier orthodoxy. The royal family
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THE CHILDHOOD OF CLOTILDA 21
important to realise her personality in order to
understand her daughter who was her living image,
and who to the end of her life remained faithful tothe maternal precepts and example. Clotilda wasborn at Lyons, her father's capital, towards the year
474. She had one sister, younger than herself,named Sedeluba, with whom she was educated, bothof them bright examples at the court of Lyons ofwhat Christian girls should be. Their mother took
the greatest care to remove them from the manypernicious influences which congregate around a
court, and to bring them up in the practice of theChristian virtues. At a period when devotion tothe Saints was so ardently practised, there can beno doubt that the two sisters were encouraged
frequently to invoke the blessed souls under whosepatronage Christianity had taken root in Lyons. Thelocal church possessed no more heroic or touchingmemory than that of the slave martyr, Blandina,whose sublime constancy in the midst of the mostcruel tortures had been an honour to her sex and the
glory of her companions in slavery. There can be nodoubt that the image of the noble virgin was con-stantly before the eyes of the two young princesses.
The court of Chilperic was the meeting-place ofall the important men of the kingdom, and no doubtthe Catholic bishops were frequently to be seen
there. We know that Apollinarus Sidonius, thecultured prelate, visited the court on more than oneoccasion, and, indeed, it is to these visits that weowe the few details, unhappily only too rare, whichhelp us to picture the life of those times. Saint
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22 SAINT CLOTILDA
Avitus, the great Saint of Burgundy, must also havebeen a frequent visitor ; none among his colleagues
was moreassiduous in
attendance on the sovereign,not indeed in the expectation of receiving favours,
but in order to defend Catholic interests, and in the
hope of bringing back the king to the true faith by
the force of personal influence. Thus the princessesmust constantly have met these saintly and venerablemen in the presence of their parents, surrounded byall the prestige of their ecclesiastical dignity andtheir commanding talents, and it is pleasant to thinkof the future wife of King Clovis kneeling for the
blessing of the saintly Avitus.
But, among all the bishops, he whom they knewbest, and whose virtues and sanctity must have made
the deepest impression upon them, was undoubtedlyPatiens, bishop of Lyons. Tradition is unanimous
in testifying to the heroic charity displayed by the
venerable old man during a great famine in Auvergne,and no one enjoyed more completely the respect ofhis contemporaries.! It was a special privilege forClotilda to be able to study the Catholic Church
through such representative ecclesiastics, and weshould bear in mind the influence they doubtless
exercised over her. Nothing develops the moral
life of a child more surely than the impressions ofearly years, and the virtues with which it is brought
in contact leave an ineffaceable imprint on the soul.
The death of Chilperic, which seems to haveoccurred towards the year 490, produced a great
change in the circumstances of the Queen and her^ ApoUinarus Sidonius, Epistolae^ VI. 12.
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THE CHILDHOOD OF CLOTILDA 23
young daughters. In accordance with the universal
custom of the times, the kingdom should have been
divided between the two brothers of the deceased
sovereign, who left no son to succeed him. Thereis no direct evidence as to how this division waseffected, or indeed as to whether it ever took place
all that we know is that from this date onward,Gondebald took up his residence at Lyons. Care-
tena and her two daughters retired to the court of
Godegisil, King of Geneva, who seems to have beenthe guardian of the young princesses.^ If we askwhy the royal ladies preferred the court of Genevato that of Lyons, and the protection of Godegisil to
that of Gondebald, the answer may probably be foundin the fact that Godegisil was a Catholic, whereas
Gondebald, as we know, in spite of the hopes whichfrom time to time he excited in the prelates of his
kingdom, never succeeded in throwing off the bonds
of Arianism.
Freed from the restraints of a throne, Caretena
was henceforth able to devote her whole time to herfamily and her religious duties. It would be unfitting
to penetrate into this holy interior, of which, indeed,
we could only guess at the main features. Thepractices of a fervent piety, combined with good
works inspired by a wise charity, filled the solitary
life of the royal widow, whose home was graced bythe presence of two daughters worthy of their saintly
^ We learn from Gregory of Tours, H. F. II. 28, that the sistersdid not live at the court of Gondebald, and it is clear from anincident related by Fredegarus, IV. 22, after the death of Chilperic,
that they were living at Geneva. Our conclusion therefore seemsjustified.
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THE CHILDHOOD OF CLOTILDA 25
hour, and there was perhaps as much anxiety andjealousy as admiration in the sentiments with which
he inspired them. As for Clovis himself, carefulto conciliate those whom he had no interest in de-stroying, he kept up friendly relations with the
Burgundian kings, and, we are told, sent frequentembassies to the courts of Lyons and Geneva.
Clovis, although still a young man, had long passed
the age at which barbarian sovereigns were in the
habit of contracting matrimonial alliances. He wasalready the father of a son named Thierry, the off-spring of one of those illicit unions that all Germanic
princes permitted themselves, who was being broughtup in his father's palace. But Clovis was eager toestablish under his roof a spouse whose royal blood
should be worthy of his own. If we accept thetestimony of the chroniclers, it was the king's envoys,who, filled with admiration for the beauty of Clotilda,
extolled her to their master and decided him to askfor her hand in marriage.^ It is quite probable thatsuch was the case, but we must also take into con-sideration Clovis' desire to win over the Burgundians
as allies against the Visigoths. Moreover, a Catholicprincess could not fail to be a bond between him andhis subjects of Roman origin, and there is no doubtthat this would have been a primary consideration in
the eyes of the conqueror.
However this may have been, it is certain that
Clotilda's guardian did not hesitate a single in-stant before accepting a proposal which seemedto promise peace and security to the Burgundian
1 Gregory of Tours, H. F., II. 28.
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THE CHILDHOOD OF CLOTILDA 27
In the perplexity of mind in which these difficult
considerations must have placed them, we can easilyimagine that the two women turned for counsel tothose who were the authorised interpreters of thedivine law and of the will of the Church. We canimagine the saintly and gentle encouragement of
Patiens ; we can figure to ourselves the questionlaid before the great bishop of Vienne, so strong and
firm, whose eagle eye would have clearly discerned
the vast possibilities that the conversion of Cloviswould open up for the Church and for the Prankish
people. And if the princesses confided in him theirreligious anxieties no one was better fitted than heto reassure their tender consciences by showing
them, with characteristic audacity of thought, that
analliance with the pagan king would associate
Clotilda with some great and mysterious design ofProvidence. These, in truth, are no more thanhypotheses ; what however is highly probable is that
the bishops were consulted and that they gave their
consent on one express condition, a condition re-
corded by an ancient historian,^ and which would
have been in conformity with the constant tradition
of the Church : i.e. that the children of the unionshould be brought up in the Catholic faith. Onthese terms the Bishops could contemplate without
anxiety the union of Clovis and Clotilda, for by a
temporary concession they were purchasing the
most splendid of expectations, and history teachesus that they were not mistaken.
^ Dubos, Critical History of the Foundation of the French
Monarchy^ Vol. III. p. 78.
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28 SAINT CLOTILDA
There being no further obstacle to the fulfilment
of Clovis' wishes, the marriage was quickly arranged.The betrothal, according to an ancient Burgundianlegend,! took place by proxy at Chalon-sur-Saone. In
accordance with the nuptial rite customary among theFranks, the ambassadors of Clovis presented the sou
and the denier representing the purchase of the bride
by their master.'-^ Then Clotilda started on herjourney to rejoin him whose destiny she had promised
to share without having made his acquaintance.The separation must have been bitter. To drag
oneself away from a mother, a sister, a circle offriends, from the pleasant and helpful atmosphere of
Catholic charity, to go on a long journey to a
country that had barely emerged from barbarism, to
live alone and without external sympathy as the wife
of a heathen was a prospect which might well dis-
courage any soul less fortified by the spirit of God.
What sort of man was Clovis? What fate did hereserve for his wife? Would he keep the promisesmade in his name? All these questions must havesuggested themselves to the mind of the young prin-
cess when, after the last farevvells with tears in her
eyes, she entered the litter which was to bear her byeasy stages from her native land. No painter haspictured for us the melancholy scene, but if we wishto realise it in all its pathetic truth, we have only toturn in the poems of Fortunatus^ to the farewell
of Galswintha quitting her mother and the beloved^ Fredegarus, III. i8.2 Fredegarus, loc. cit.
^ FortunatuSj Carmina, VI. 7.
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CHAPTER III
THE FIRST YEARS OF MARRIED LIFE
'THE impatient Clovis, eager to embrace hisbride, came to meet her, according to a
reliable local tradition, at Villery, to the south of
Troyes.i Thence he escorted her to Soissons, wherethe marriage ceremony took place, with all customary
barbaric pomp. The Franks displayed the greatestenthusiasm over the marriage of their sovereign with
the daughter of the Burgundian king. No otherroyal union of the time made so vivid and lastingan impression. The national bards vied with oneanother in celebrating the event, and, in their hands,
the story took on new and wonderful episodes, untilit was transformed into a veritable nuptial poem. It
was by this poem alone that the memory of Clotilda's
marriage had been preserved, until the day when,for the first time, a chronicler recorded the events of
the reign of Clovis. He repeated all the legendaryadditions, and his successors followed his example.
In this way legend at an early date took the placeof historical fact, and, during many centuries, allthat was best known of the life of Clotilda was thatwhich never really occurred. It is time to restore
historic truth to its rightful place, and, without
^ Fredegarus, III. 19.
30
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THE FIRST YEARS OF MARRIED LIFE 31
entirely ignoring the claims of popular folk-lore, to
relegate it to the domain of fiction.^
Clotilda, as Queen of the Franks, naturally sharedin the life and interests of her husband. She lived
with him in the ancient Roman city of Soissons,whose sumptuous buildings had served as residences
for the Roman governors, and, at a later date, hadgiven shelter to the short-lived regal state kept by
Syagrius. Clovis and Clotilda succeeded to the son
of Aegidius in the stately magnificence of the alabastercastle situated to the north of the town, whose mighty
ruins have in all ages impressed the popular imagina-
tion and the mind of the arch^ologist. The townwas rich in Christian sanctuaries; a beautiful basilica
dedicated to the Blessed Virgin had been erected on
the ruins of a temple of I sis, and the two martyrs,
so dear to the piety of the inhabitants of Soissons,
Crispin and Crispinian, were honoured in several
churches and chapels.
It would be a mistake, however, to suppose that
the days of Queen Clotilda were spent mainly in thissingle city. The Merovingian kings possessed at thattime no proper capital ; the centre of their govern-
ment was wherever they might happen to be, andthey were to be found, in turn, in all the quarters of
their kingdom. In order to understand this princely
existence, we must remember that what to-day wecall the civil list, consisted mainly, in those times, of
the products in kind of the royal domains. Thesewere both numerous and scattered ; their producewas very large, and at a fixed date the king would
^ See Appendix.
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THE FIRST YEARS OF MARRIED LIFE 33
the king and queen is shown even more clearly by
the eager entreaties that Clotilda was in the habitof addressing to her husband on the subject of his
conversion.! It is obvious that she must have en-
joyed considerable ascendency over his mind in order
to have repeatedly urged so great a sacrifice without
fear of a violent refusal. Moreover, we know thatwhen at length the day of grace dawned for Clovis,it was " the God of Clotilda " whom he invoked, words
full of beauty and pathos which seem to throw anilluminating light on the conjugal life, full of trust
and affection, which united the king to his saintly wife.
But we must not allow ourselves to anticipateevents. Our historians inform us, and we have nodifficulty in believing them, that the conversion of
her husband was Clotilda's most constant preoccupa-tion. But the hour of his conversion had not yet
sounded. Far from throwing himself into the arms
of the Catholic Church, there was a serious dangerlest in becoming a Christian he should decide in
favour of Arianism. Arianism at this time might
almost be described as being the accepted form of
Germanic Christianity. Spread among the bar-barian tribes with a marvellous missionary zeal by
the Goths, who had been among the first adherentsof its tenets, it had attracted in turn all the Germanicnations who had consented to adopt Christianity,including the Heruli, the Rugi, the Vandals, the very
Burgundians themselves. All the Germanic sove-reigns, following the example of Theodoric the Great,
professed the creed of Arius. For them and for^ Gregory of Tours, H. F., II. 30.
C3
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THE FIRST YEARS OF MARRIED LIFE 35
might well have shown himself jealous, had not the
prelate done his utmost from the first to place this
devotion at the service of the youthful conqueror.Standing, so to speak, on the extreme verge of civilisa-
tion, facing the vast hordes of the barbarian world,
Remi had perceived, with that clear-sightednesswhich is often bestowed on the pastors of souls,
the great future that lay before the barbarians whowere descending as conquerors upon ancient Gaul.
He entertained no illusions concerning the ultimatefate of all attempts at a restoration such as Syagrius
was conducting almost under his eyes and in his
immediate neighbourhood. Boldly, with a decision
and a vigour of action which we cannot sufficientlyadmire, Remi had taken sides with the invaders.
Scarcely had Clovis entered upon the inheritance
of his father Childeric, when he received from theBishop of Reims a letter of congratulation containing
these opening words : " We learn that you havetaken into your hands the government of Belgian
Gaul." 1 It was a tacit recognition of the legitimacy
of the conqueror's rights. After this first step it
was easy for the prelate to offer good advice and
so propound a scheme of government without offence
to the young king. The policy suggested may besummed up in two words : to govern in accord withthe bishops.
This act on the part of St Remi had forgedthe first link between monarch and prelate, andfrom that time forward their relations had tended
^ See the restored text of this document in the MonumentaGermaniae Historica Epistolae^ III. p. 113.
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36 SAINT CLOTILDA
to become more and more intimate. The chroniclersare of opinion that it was Remi who forced the king
to give back a precious vessel stolen from his churchby the Prankish soldiers during the pillage of the
city, and we can well believe that it was he.^ Havingbecome the subject of Clovis by the conquest ofNorthern Gaul, the Bishop of Reims was more thanever useful to the king. The new ruler had constantneed of the advice of the prelate, of his intimate
knowledge of the country, of the authority he en-
joyed among the people. Mutual admiration, con-fidence and friendship drew still closer the ties thatunited them. The head of a diocese in which severalof the royal domains, notably the palace of Attigny,
were situated, and brother to Principius, Bishop of
Soissons, Remi found himself frequently at court.He became the confidant of Clotilda's pious aspira-tions, as of her secret anxieties, which he must in alarge measure have shared. We can readily imaginethat he inspired the conduct of the young queen,
down to the smallest details, in the all-importantquestion of her husband's salvation. How could shebe better guided than by the counsels of this valiant
champion of the Church ? It is highly improbable
that Remi suggested to her to combat the paganism
of Clovis by means of long theological disquisitions
such as Gregory of Tours places in her mouth,^ and
which offer such obvious improbabilities in language
^ Gregory of Tours, H. F., II. 27, relates the episode without
the name of the Bishop. Fredegarus, III. 16, and the Liber Historiae
give the name of St Remi. Compare G. Kurth, Histoh-e Poetiquedes Merovingiens, pp. 217-220.
2 Gregory of Tours, Historia Francortwiy II. 29.
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THE FIRST YEARS OF MARRIED LIFE 37
and tone. People knew then, as well as they knowto-day, that men are not driven to abandon falsedoctrine by passionate discussions ; on the contrary,
that minds become more firmly fixed in their errors
the more energetically they see themselves com-bated. In the religious conversations that Clotilda
must have held with her husband, there can beno doubt that she spoke rather with love of Jesus
Christ, than with disdain of Wodin, that she aimed
at touching the heart rather than at convincing theintelligence. It was enough for her to defend herfaith when it was attacked, and to do so with thequiet courage and calm reason which at once silence
opposition and inspire respect in one's adversaries.
For the rest, prayer, good works, the example of
Christian virtueswere
withoutdoubt
the chosen
weapons which her feminine wit suggested to Clotilda
and which the bishop must have sanctioned.Neither did St Remi himself have frequent re-
course to direct exhortation. He preferred tosurround the king with influences and examples,
and to allow these discreet and silent messengers
to take gradual effect. It was impossible that Clovisshould not be struck by the virtues and the sanctity
of the priests and of the humble monks who helped toclear the forests of his country ; impossible that he
should not be charmed and subdued by the sublimebeauties of the Church liturgy, whenever he had
occasion to be present at her services, or that heshould not be conscious of the abyss that separated
barbarians, however victorious, from men, civilised
as they could only be, by Christianity.
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38 SAINT CLOTILDA
Moreover, political considerations began to turn
the king's thoughts towards Catholicism. In spite
of appearances to the contrary, he felt that therewas no place for him in Arianism, that he was fitto play a nobler part than that of following in the
wake of his brother-in-law Theodoric, and that byadopting the faith of his Catholic subjects, he wascreating for himself an absolutely unique position
amongst reigning sovereigns. He foresaw that,placed at the head of a kingdom made strong byunity and confidence, supported with enthusiasm
by the orthodox population and by the enormousinfluence of the Gaulish episcopate, he would dis-
pose of a power undreamt of by the Arian courts.
He had only to pronounce himself a Catholic in
order to enjoy this vast and fascinating accessionof fortune.
Thus the circle of influences was drawing roundClovis which were destined to concentrate on Chris-
tianity all the labour of his thought. But dreamsand projects passed in bewildering confusion through
his brain without producing any result. Every con-
version, according to the measure of its sincerity,
must be the work of grace. The most powerfulconsiderations cannot bring it about ; it springs
from the very depths of the human conscienceunder the pressure of a power more vivid and
more irresistible than that of either philosophy
or politics. If a clear and accurate vision of the
temporal advantages to be gained by adopting the
Catholic faith, possessed the force to compel that
interior resolution that we call conversion, Theodoric
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THE FIRST YEARS OF MARRIED LIFE 39
the Great would most certainly also have embraced
Catholicism, for his keen and powerful mind wascapable of grasping every truth. But it is gracewhich, like the stone that was cut out of a mountain,strikes the colossus of error in the feet, and breaks
it in pieces, and the hour of grace had not yet
dawned for Clovis.The first year of Clotilda's married life slipped
by, darkened by anxiety, and menaced even in itspurest joys by sudden dangers. The birth of herfirst-born son, which should have been to her a
cause for rejoicing, became instead the source of
much unhappiness. Clovis, as we have seen, hadauthorised the child's baptism, and the youngmother had done all in her power that the sacred
ceremony by which her child was to be made aChristian, might produce a salutary effect on the
mind of its father. With a pious and touchingsolicitude, she caused the sanctuary, chosen for
the celebration, to be adorned with the greatest
care. Draperies of purple and gold were suspended
from the vaulted roof, and the walls were hidden
beneath the wealth of carpets hung on every side
in accordance with Southern custom. ^ Full of joy
and of faith in Providence, the Christian queen
hoped that God would come to the help of her desire.God did indeed intervene. He visited the cradle
filled with so many holy hopes ; He struck downthe new-born babe still swathed in its white baptismal
robe ; He bruised the heart of the mother ; Hehumiliated the faith of the wife and, as though He
1 Gregory of Tours, H. F., II. 29.
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40 SAINT CLOTILDA
had been an accomplice in Clovis' incredulity, Hefurnished him with an unexpected and terrible argu-
ment. The barbarian did not hesitate to make useof it. " It is your God," he declared to Clotilda," who is the cause of our child's death. If it hadbeen consecrated to mine it would have been alive
now."
The hour was a bitter one, and the trial seemedalmost to transcend the powers of human endurance.But the heroic soul of Clotilda remained untouched
by the terrible temptation. The severity of theAlmighty, who seemed to have turned His facefrom her, did not cause her for a single moment todoubt His paternal love. Her heart was untaintedby bitterness and in the depths of her sorrow she
found words to bless the hand that had struck her." I give thanks to Almighty God," she declared," that He has not considered me unworthy to bethe mother of a child admitted into the celestial
kingdom. Having quitted the world in the white
robe of his innocence, he will rejoice in the presence
of God throughall
eternity."i
By this generous sacrifice the soul of the Christianqueen had not only triumphed over temptation ; it
had also earned the price of victory. The conver-sion of Clovis was to be the reward of intrepidfaith, and the very blow which seemed to put anend to all Clotilda's hopes, became, on the contrary,
without either her knowledge or that of her husband,
the point of departure of the conversion she had
so ardently prayed for. If the death of Ingomir
1 Gregory of Tours, H. F., II. 29.
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THE FIRST YEARS OF MARRIED LIFE 41
seemed to plead against the God of the Christians,the sublime strength of soul of the young mother
and her supernatural resignationwere
arguments
more weighty even than death.Once again, however, it seemed as though
Clotilda's cause were lost. In the following year
the birth of a second son had come to console thehearts of the king and queen. But scarcely had
the waters of baptism touched his forehead than he
too fell ill. Was the Gospel to be definitely con-founded in the sight of the Gentiles ? Already
Clovis had begun to murmur : " Can we expect anyother fate for this child than that of his brother ?
He was baptised in the name of your Christ, he iscertain therefore to die." Clotilda made no answer
to these bitter recriminations, but her heart poureditself out before God in humble and passionateprayer. On this occasion the trial was not pro-longed, and God hearkened to the prayer of Hisfaithful servant. Clodomir recovered ; ^ Clovis wassilenced and the Gospel was justified. The inherit-ance of the Frankish kingdom belonged henceforth
to a son of the Church, and the great work of theconversion of the people was in part accomplished.
From the point of view of the world this was allthat was needful, for the future of Christianity wasassured. But Clotilda had merited a yet furtherreward ; it was her much-loved spouse whom shedesired to lead in the way of salvation. Throughthe intervention of Providence this supreme hope
was about to be realised.^ Gregory of Tours, H. F., II. 29.
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CHAPTER IV
THE CONVERSION OF CLOVIS
POUR years had passed since the marriage ofClotilda and Clovis, and the latter was still a
heathen. But the year 496 was not destined topass until, according to the naive expression of the
old Prankish chronicler, necessity had forced the
king to confess that which, of his own free will, hehad always denied.
Among the many wars which filled his reign themost noteworthy seems to have been that which he
waged against the Alamanni. This Germanic people,established on the right bank of the Rhine, between
the Maine and the Danube, was a worthy rival tothe Prankish nation. They possessed all thosegreat qualities which had won for the latter thesovereignty of Gaul, and they were quite competentto dispute its possession with some hope of success.Moreover, their belligerent character and their need
of expansion made it inevitable that they shouldbreak out into hostilities against their powerful
neighbours.
It would seem to have been the Ripuarian Prankswho first withstood the shock of the Alamannicbands. Beneath the walls of Tolbiac, at the
entrance to the vast plain which formed the heart42
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THE CONVERSION OF CLOVIS 43
of the Ripuarian kingdom, the Alamanni, who hadcome down from the heights of the Eifel, came incontact with the army of King Sigebert, who lay inwait to intercept the road to Cologne. The battlewas a bloody one, and Sigebert, who apparentlyremained master of the field, received a wound inhis knee which made him lame for the rest of hislife.
The danger to a nation who were the allies of theSalii and of a dynasty which was connected bymarriage with his own, necessarily obliged Clovis
to descend into the arena, apart from the fact that
he probably had to defend his own frontiers againstthe inroads of his turbulent neighbours. In the
dearth of all historical information, we can only
indulge in conjectures concerning the causes ofthe war. All that we know for certain is that agreat battle which promised to be decisive took
place between the armies of the Franks and the
Alamanni in the neighbourhood of the Rhine and
probably in the direction of Alsace. According to
the outcome of the battle, Gaul would have either
remained in the possession of the Franks or have
fallen as a long-coveted prey into the hands of
their redoubtable foes. I may, perhaps, be allowed
to transcribe from my Life of Clovis the accountof this great crisis in Frankish history:
" Realising all that was at stake, Clovis had
assembled his whole army, which was probably aug-mented by a contingent of Ripuarian Franks. Ontheir side, the Alamanni must have had a no less
considerable force drawn up in battle array, for they
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44 SAINT CLOTILDA
were not only able to hold the victory in suspense,
but even at a given moment to drive back thePrankish regiments. The Alamannic furia wascelebrated in battle ; their warriors rushed to victory
with an impetus that nothing could withstand.
Brought face to face with their rivals, whose national
pride had been excited by recent events, they knewthey were playing for the highest stakes, and their
realisation of the gravity of the moment intensified
their fever for the fight." Already they seemed to be within reach of
victory. The Prankish army began to give wayand a general rout seemed imminent. Clovis, whowas fighting at the head of his troops, saw thatthe courage of his men was failing and that hecould no longer bring them up to the assault. Asin a flash of lightning there passed before his eyes
all the horrors of defeat all the disasters of flight.Then, on the point of perishing, abandoned by his
Gods, whom he had invoked in vain, he seemed tohear once again, in his inner conscience, that much-loved voice that had spoken to him so often of a
greater and more powerful God. And at the samemoment, from the depths of his memory, storedwith the words of Clotilda, there arose the figure
of the loving and tender Christ, who was, as shehad assured him, the vanquisher of death and the
Prince of centuries to come. And in his despair
he turned to Him with a cry of anguish and distress' Jesus Christ,' he exclaimed, according to the evi-
dence of our ancient historian, * Thou who art, ac-cording to Clotilda, the Son of the living God, help
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me in my distress, and if Thou givest me victory,I will believe in Thee and will be baptised in ThyName.'
"The words of Clovis have re-echoed throughcenturies and will be recorded by history through
all time. Uttered in the midst of the horrors of
the battle-field, from the depths of a royal heart
speaking in the name of his people, they are some-thing more than the words spoken by a man ina moment of peril ; they represent the nation itselfin the most solemn moment of its existence. Suchis the historic import of the vow that fell from thelips of Clovis in that supreme moment: it was apact proposed to Christ by the Prankish people,
and which Christ ratified. For, writes the chronicler,
scarcely had Clovis pronounced these words, whenthe fortunes of the field seemed suddenly to be
reversed. As though they were conscious of theintervention of some new and powerful ally, thesoldiers of Clovis recovered themselves ; the Frank-
ish troops returned to the charge, the Alamanni fell
backin their turn, their
king waskilled in
themelee, and the vanquishers saw themselves trans-
formed into vanquished. The death of their leadergave a final blow to their valour; they flung awaytheir arms, and on the very field of battle begged
for mercy of the Frankish king. Clovis treated
them with kindness and generosity, and, satisfied
with the fact of their submission, he put an im-
mediate end to the war."
Such, described from a contemporary source, is the
history of the triumph of Clovis over the Alamanni,
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46 SAINT CLOTILDA
or rather, we may say, the triumph of Christianityover paganism. We find a worthy counterpart tothis great battle in that of the Pons Milvius : theone closed the annals of the ancient world, the
other opens the annals of the modern world. Itsimportance in history is therefore absolutely unique.
Looking back from the point of vantage that four-
teen centuries of time afford to the historian, wecan perceive that the destinies of Europe were
decided at the same time as those of the Prankishpeople, that the future of the Prankish people is to
be traced to the victory of their king, and that all
these mighty interests were dependent on the solu-
tion given, in the depths of a man's conscience, to
the essential problem which presents itself to the
soul of each one of us. It is here that lies the trueinterest of the event. The sudden action of a soul,which, arriving at a decision as in a flash of light-
ning, turned towards the Saviour of the world, dis-
placed in a single instant the centre of gravity of
history, gave birth to the first Catholic nations, and
placed in their hands the helm of civilisation.^
Nor must we forget that the triumph of Cloviswas also the triumph of Clotilda. Her prayers andtears had at length prevailed, and the husband to
whom she was deeply attached would never be takenfrom her, either in this world or the next. We willnot attempt to describe her joy when she clasped
the victor in her arms and learned the truth fromhis own lips. Moments of such pure and intensehappiness are rare in any human life. For Clotilda
1 G. Kurth, Clovis, p. 3 15-31 8.
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THE CONVERSION OF CLOVIS 47
it was the supreme moment of her existence, and itssweetness sufficed to radiate all her remaining years.
Later, sorrow engulfed her saintly soul and turned
her days to a veritable martyrdom, but one joy
could never be taken from her : that of having given
to God the soul most dear to her on earth, and ofhaving been chosen to unfold the Gospel to the
greatest of Christian nations.
Clotilda was anxious that not a minute should belost before securing the fruits of Clovis' vow.
Without delay she sent a message to St Remi,
inviting him to Attigny, where, as seems probable,
she was living for the time with her husband.^
Secrecy was at first observed as regards the change
that had come over the heart of the king, and mean-
while the work of his instruction was hurriedforward. As a friend of the bishops, the husband
of Clotilda, and the leader of a people a great
number of whom were Catholics, Clovis was veryfar from being one of those untutored savages into
whose heart no ray of Christianity had penetrated.
Nevertheless it is clear that the services of St
Remi as a catechist were indispensable ; he pos-sessed a thorough knowledge of the barbarian world,
he foresaw their brilliant future and, above all, he
could claim the confidence of the king.
Before very long preparations were begun for the
baptism of Clovis. But a question presented itself
which was to be for some time a source of serious
^ We have adopted here the ingenious conjecture of the Rev.F. Jubaru in the Etudes Religieuses, vol. LXVII, p. 297-300 (Feb. 15th, 1896).
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THE CONVERSION OF CLOVIS 49
their Gods. What would become of this intimatecommunion of views and sentiments when Clovispassed from the service of Wodin to the service ofChrist ? It was absolutely essential that his antrus-tions should follow him to the foot of the newaltars ; otherwise the guard would disband itself,
and the king, deprived of his glorious band of
followers, would be stripped of all prestige.
But what guarantee had he that his faithful body-
guard would sacrifice their gods to their king ?
Clovis was far from being entirely at ease on thispoint. " I am ready to listen to you," he assuredSt Remi, " but my followers will not forsake theirgods." These words, which the chronicler attributes
to him, sum up with great precision the problem
which the powerful monarch had to face. As therewas no possibility of taking any definite steps untilhe had arrived at some understanding with theantrustions, Clovis summoned them to a meeting,explained his intentions and asked their advice. Aswith one voice, they all declared that they were
ready to forsake their mortal gods, and to accept
the eternal God announced to them by Clovis.Thus, by a readiness which the Prankish chronicler
accepts as providential, they disposed of the one
serious obstacle that existed to the conversion of
Clovis. There only remained to fix the date of theevent.
" An ancient tradition which was said to havecome down from apostolic times, ordained that thesacrament of baptism should only be administered
on Easter Sunday in order that this great festivalD3
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50 SAINT CLOTILDA
might be, in a sense, a day of resurrection both for
God and for men. But, in the opinion of thebishops, a respect for tradition should not be allowed
to override the very important reasons that existed
for not prolonging the catechumenate of the king
and his followers. Taking into consideration theunique circumstances of the case, it was deemedadvisable to make an exception to the ordinaryrule, and to fix the ceremony for Christmas Day.
After the Easter festival the Nativity was un-doubtedly the feast which by its mystical significance,
and by the imposing solemnity of its rites, best lent
itself to the great event that was about to takeplace.
" Clovis arranged with the bishops that the feast
should be celebrated with all possible magnificence.All the most important personages of his realm were
invited to be present, and invitations were issued
moreover to princes of the Church beyond thefrontiers of the kingdom. We know at least by aletter from St Avitus of Vienne that the illustrious
prelate was among those bidden to be present. Thebaptism of Clovis took on itself the importance of
an international event. Christian Gaul followed
the preparations with a sympathetic interest; the
princes of the Catholic hierarchy turned their eyes
full of hope towards the Prankish nation, and a
tremor of joy passed through the Church which in
so many lands was languishing under the yoke ofheresy.
" The great day dawned at last which was to con-vert the Prankish nation into the eldest daughter
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of the Catholic Church. It was the 25th of De-
cember 496. Never since its first foundation had
the city of Reims been witness of so imposing asolemnity ; nor had it been behindhand in displaying
all the pomp necessary for its worthy celebration.Rich carpets adorned the fronts of the houses;
great embroidered veils, stretched across the streets,
cast solemn shadows ; the churches were radiant
in all their finery, the baptistery was adorned withalmost inconceivable grandeur, and countless candles
shone through the clouds of ascending incense.
There was something celestial in the sweet odour,
writes the old chronicler, and those who, by the
grace of God, were witnesses of the ceremony, might
have imagined themselves transplanted into the midst
of the joys of Paradise.
" From the ancient palace of the Governors ofLower Belgium, where he had taken up his residence,the Frankish king, followed by a triumphal proces-
sion, made his way amid the enthusiastic acclama-tions of the crowd to the Cathedral of Notre Dame,
where the baptism was to take place. * He ad-vanced,' writes a contemporary author, ' like a
second Constantine to the baptismal font to be
cleansed from the leprosy of sin, and the stains
of former guilt were about to be washed away inthe laver of regeneration.' The procession was
formed in accordance with the ecclesiastical ritual.At its head was carried a cross, followed by thesacred books borne by clerics ; then came the kingled by the bishop, as though to guide him into the
House of God. Behind them walked Clotilda, the
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52 SAINT CLOTILDA
true heroine of the day, and she was accompaniedby the youthful Theodoric, who was to follow his
father to the font, and by the Princesses Lanthildaand Albofleda, the former an Arian, and the latterstill plunged in the darkness of heathenism. Three
thousand Franks, among whom were all the king'sbodyguard, followed their sovereign, and came, likehim, to acknowledge the God of Clotilda as thesupreme power. The Litany of the Saints alternatedwith the Church's most triumphant hymns, andre-echoed through the festive town, like chants in
the celestial kingdom. * Is this,' asked Clovis of St
Remi, ' the kingdom of heaven that you promised
me ? ' ' No,' answered the prelate, * but it is thebeginning of the road that leads thither.' Arrived
at the threshold of the baptistery, where the bishopswho were to take part in the ceremony cameto meet the procession, it was the king who spokefirst and requested St Remi to confer upon himthe Sacrament of Baptism. ' It is well, great
Sicamber,' answered the priest ; ' bow down thyneck with meekness, adore what thou hast hitherto
burned and burn what thou hast adored.' Andforthwith the sacred ceremony commenced, with all
the solemnity that has been observed through long
centuries. Replying to the liturgical questions of
the officiating priest, the king declared that he
renounced the worship of Satan, and repeated his
profession of the Catholic faith in which, in accord-
ance with the special needs of a time in which
Arianism was rampant, the belief in the Most Holy
Trinity was formulated with extreme precision.
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Then, stepping down into the baptismal waters, hereceived the triple sacramental immersion in the
name of the Father, and of the Son, and of theHoly Ghost. On leaving the baptistery he receivedfurther the Sacrament of Confirmation, in accord-
ance with the custom observed at adult baptisms.^
The members of the royal family were immersedafter the king. Lanthilda, who was already aChristian, was not re-baptised, but merely receivedconfirmation according to the Catholic rite. Asregards the three thousand Franks who crowdedround the sacred edifice, it is probable that they were
baptised by aspersion, which was already practisedat that date. All the newly baptised were subse-
quently clothed in white garments, typical of the
state of grace into which they had entered in virtueof the Sacrament of Regeneration." ^
One circumstance will have impressed the readerin this description, the main points of which have
been taken from the most ancient sources : we referto the presence of Clotilda in the baptismal proces-
sion. It was her work which received its finalcrown on this day of festivity. Who, better thanshe, deserved to rejoice and to be a happy witness
of the event ? Like that other valiant Christian,
Joan of Arc, who, a thousand years later, was tolead the triumphal procession of another king to
that same Church, she had borne the heat of theday and it was only just that she should have hershare of honour.
^ See Appendix.2 Q Kurth, C/om's, p. 339-348.
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CHAPTER V
THE LAST YEARS OF MARRIED LIFE
npHE mission entrusted to Clotilda by Providencewas accomplished ; the Prankish king was a
Catholic and the French nation was founded. Thehumble Christian who had been chosen as theinstrument of this work of salvation was about toretire into the seclusion of her home and disappearbehind the great destinies that she had inaugurated.
History has nothing further to record of her during
the reign of Clovis ; the only occasion on whichmention is made of her name is in conjunction withthat of her husband and in reference to preparations
which they made together concerning their tomb.But if the daily life of the Saint was henceforth
screened from the light of publicity, it can only have
been yet more meritorious in the sight of God.Family duties, the constant exercise of charity, the
discreet but beneficent influence that she brought to
bear on her husband, formed her daily preoccupa-
tions. Her name does not appear in connectionwith any of the deeds of Clovis, but none the less
her sanctity penetrated them all, and we can restassured that whenever he laboured on behalf of the
kingdom of God he found in her a zealous andactive co-worker.
I n spite of the silence of contemporary chronicles, we54
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shall make an attempt to reconstruct, in some measure,the royal and saintly existence which we have under-
taken torelate. In default of special information
wecan trace the main lines of her life in that of Clovis,which is more fully known to us, and of which Clotilda,as a faithful wife, shared the various vicissitudes.
The Frankish monarchy had advanced with greatstrides during the ten years of Clovis' reign. FromSoissons it had penetrated to Paris. Already at
that time the ancient town, overflowing the narrowlimits of the Island of the City, which had been its
cradle, had spread itself out along both banks of the
noble river, but more especially on the left bank,where, all through the Merovingian period, the
political life of the Frankish kingdom was centred.
The vast palace of the Thermae, the imposing ruinsof which still arrest the eye in the midst of the gay
life of the Latin quarter, was, in all probability, the
home of the royal couple during their sojourns inthe capital. During the summer months they pre-ferred to live in one or other of the royal villas,
those nearest to Paris being situated at Epineuil,
Bonneuil, Reuil, Chelles and Clichy. In each of
these royal residences the Saint, who had her ownquarters, led the stately life of a powerful queen,
surrounded by a numerous following of officialsand servants. Her court, like that of hermother Caretena, in earlier years at Lyons, was therendezvous of all who had a favour to beg. Therecan be no question that the bishops and other
ecclesiastical dignitaries of the Gallic Church wereconstantly in attendance, and that the founders of
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56 SAINT CLOTILDA
religious houses frequently returned from their
visits to the court enriched by the liberality of the
pious queen. Clotilda loved to surround herselfwith saintly souls whose piety was an encourage-ment to her own, and there can be little doubt thatin the midst of this barbarian society she attracted
to herself all who were distinguished by the lustre oftheir virtues and the dignity of their life.
It is therefore highly probable that at an early date,
as we learn from pious traditions, friendly relationswere established between the queen and the saintly
woman who was regarded as the good genius of thecapital. The Virgin of Nanterre, who had at thistime already entered on the last years of her
earthly career, enjoyed an immense popularity with
the people of Paris, who have always venerated thefigure of the nun, whether, as then, under the nameof Genevieve, or, as in our day, under that of Sister
Rosalie.! The people paid a willing homage to thebrilliancy of her virtues, to the virile strength of a
soul that nothing could daunt, and, above all, to the
ardour of her patriotism. It seems at first sight alittle strange to speak of patriotism in a nun of thesixth century, and it is possible that the truemeaning may not be understood in an age in whichpatriotism has come to be identified more and morewith hatred of foreigners. But St Genevieve waspatriotic as Joan of Arc was patriotic, in the sense
that her patriotism consisted above all in a ruling
love for the people in the midst of whom she hadbeen born. And this love became in her the
^ See Appendix.
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THE LAST YEARS OF MARRIED LIFE 57
principle of a ceaseless and dauntless activity,
triumphing over all the weaknesses of her sex.
What Joan of Arc was in the presence of theEnglish, that Genevieve had been before the
barbarian invaders. She alone had persuaded herfellow-citizens not to despair at the approach of
Attila and his Huns. If she did not lead the
assault like the Maid at Orleans she at least stoodin the breach when Paris was besieged by the
conquering Franks, and she only escaped in orderto pass through a thousand dangers and seek from
afar the means of revictualling the city. TheFranks bore no grudge against their courageous
adversary ; once masters of Paris they too had
bowed down like the native population, before the
ascendencyof this valiant daughter of
France whoappeared before them as the advocate of theoppressed. Genevieve, in a word, was the mostpopular figure in all Paris. Men were accustomedto meet with her wherever there was suffering tosoothe, grief to console, injustice to redress, a kindly
word to be spoken, a bold initiative to take. Thesoul of Paris seemed to find utterance by the lips of
the holy nun, who spoke with an animation and akindliness which were emphatically French.^
^ See the Life of the Saint by the Bollandists, under the date of
Jan. 3rd, and the new editions given by M. Kohler in theBibliotheque de VEcole des Hautes Etudes^ pamphlet 48, and by the
Abbe Narbey in the Bulletin d'Histoire et d'Archeologie du Diocesede Paris, 1884. M. Krusch, who has attempted to prove thisimportant document to be apocryphal, has been triumphantlyrefuted by the Abbe Duchesne {Bibliotheque de VEcole desChartesi vol. LIV.).
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It is not surprising that so unique a womanshould have quickly made friends with Clotilda.Genevieve did not hesitate to ask an interview ofroyal personages, whenever the interests of charitydemanded it. On her side Clotilda was doubtlessattracted by the penetrating charm of the Christiansybil. A warm and sincere friendship may wellhave sprung up between the daughter of the people
and the daughter of kings. History, it is true,
makes no mention of the fact, but all the circum-stances of the case seem to point in that direction.Otherwise how can we explain the unprecedentedhonour that later was paid to Genevieve when ather death the royal vaults of Mount Lutetia werethrown open to receive her mortal remains ? By
thus sharing her last dwelling-place with the humblenun, Clotilda would seem to have wished to give anincontrovertible proof of the link that bound themtogether, and it is quite in accordance with historic
truth that we should interpret the act as one of thehighest significance.
The principal occupation of the queen duringthese years was, we need hardly say, the educationof her children, who were four in number. AfterClodomir, who was born about the year 494, therefollowed two sons, Childebert and Clothair, and one
daughter, who received her mother's name in baptism.All the children grew up under the personal surveil-
l